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Bad History, Worse Policy Peter J. Wallison

Bad History, Worse Policy By Peter J. Wallison

Bad History, Worse Policy by Peter J. Wallison


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Summary

This timely study focuses on how the government-constructed narratives surrounding the collapse of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the 2008 financial crisis shaped the policymaking that led to the Dodd-Frank Act.

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Bad History, Worse Policy Summary

Bad History, Worse Policy: How a False Narrative About the Financial Crisis Led to the Dodd-Frank Act by Peter J. Wallison

This timely study focuses on how the government-constructed narratives surrounding the collapse of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the 2008 financial crisis shaped the policymaking that led to the Dodd-Frank Act. The book shows that every major provision of the act can be traced directly to that narrative, which ignored the government's own role and focused entirely on the errors of the private sector. In the next Congress, whether or not the Republicans are in control of the House and Senate, there will be a concerted effort to make changes in-or even repeal-the Dodd-Frank Act. The essays in this book, originally published by AEI as Financial Services Outlooks, and the accompanying commentary provide a thorough backgrounder for anyone interested in financial policy.

Bad History, Worse Policy Reviews

I don't remember any period in modern history when the analysis of historic economic events has been more dominated by the clear thinking of one person. That person's name is Peter Wallison. He has dispelled more myths and provided more insights than all other scholars and commentators combined. If you want to know what triggered the financial crisis and why Federal policy misdiagnosed both the illness and the appropriate treatment, all you have to do is read this book. -- Phil Gramm, Former Chairman of the Senate Banking Committee and Senior Partner of US Policy Metrics
This book is indispensable reading for anyone seeking to understand the actual causes of the financial crisis and why the Dodd-Frank Act should be reconsidered. Peter Wallison reveals how government failures, not market failures, produced the financial crisis. With sound logic and solid evidence, he explains how the Left's blind faith in unaccountable regulators and its institutionalization of government bailouts have made our financial system less safe. Peter Wallison was right on the dangers posed by the GSEs; in time he will also be proven right on the origins of the financial crisis and the flaws of the Dodd-Frank Act. -- Senator Richard C. Shelby, (R-AL) Ranking Member of the U.S. Senate's Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs
In a sense, this volume consists of two books. One is a compilation of 30 essays written from 2004 to 2012 by Wallison (fellow and codirector, American Enterprise Institute's program on financial policy studies) for the Financial Services Outlook series. The essays are divided into three topical sections: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and other government-sponsored enterprises, the financial crisis, and a critique of the Dodd-Frank Act. The second, shorter book consists of original narratives introducing each section, plus an introductory and a concluding chapter showing how provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act are based on flawed premises about causes of the financial breakdown beginning in 2007, and suggesting section-by-section changes to the act. The former book provides an account of the financial crisis beginning in 2007 as it developed; the latter, an interpretation of those events with the benefit of hindsight. This volume is polemical in dealing with this topic. General readers; students, upper-division undergraduate and up; professionals. * CHOICE *

About Peter J. Wallison

Peter J. Wallison is the Arthur F. Burns Fellow in Financial Policy Studies at AEI. He served as general counsel of the US Treasury Department and as White House counsel to President Ronald Reagan.

Table of Contents

Introduction: ObamaCare for the Financial System 1 Narratives and Policy 3 The Narrative on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac 8 The Narrative for the Financial Crisis 10 The Narrative and the Dodd-Frank Act 16 1. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac 24 The GSEs' Narrative and the Sources of Their Power 25 AEI Conferences 27 A Fortuitous Event Shifts the Narrative 28 Financial Services Outlooks on Fannie and Freddie 30 Financial Services Outlooks The Case for Privatizing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Grows Stronger (May 2004) 38 Regulating Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: Now It Gets Serious (May 2005) 48 Regulating Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: Now It Gets Serious (Continued) (September 2005) 63 Moral Hazard on Steroids: The OFHEO Report Shows That Regulation Cannot Protect U.S. Taxpayers (July 2006) 73 Fannie and Freddie by Twilight (August 2008) 85 The Last Trillion-Dollar Commitment: The Destruction of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (September 2008) 98 Cause and Effect: Government Policies and the Financial Crisis (November 2008) 116 Wallison.indb 5 9/17/12 1:00 PM vi The Dodd-Frank Act: ESSAYS IN OPPOSITION The Dead Shall Be Raised: The Future of Fannie and Freddie (January-February 2010) 133 Going Cold Turkey: Three Ways to End Fannie and Freddie without Slicing Up the Taxpayers (September 2010) 147 2. The Financial Crisis 164 The Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission Absolves the Government 164 Financial Services Outlooks and the Left's Narrative 169 Financial Services Outlooks Bear Facts: The Flawed Case for Tighter Regulation of Securities Firms (April 2008) 184 Fair Value Accounting: A Critique (July 2008) 199 Systemic Risk and the Financial Crisis (October 2008) 213 Everything You Wanted to Know about Credit Default Swaps- But Were Never Told (December 2008) 223 Stress for Success: The Bank Stress Tests Buy Time (May 2009) 243 Deregulation and the Financial Crisis: Another Urban Myth (October 2009) 255 Ideas Have Consequences: The Importance of a Narrative (May 2010) 273 Missing the Point: Lessons from The Big Short (June 2010) 284 Slaughter of the Innocents: Who Was Taking the Risks That Caused the Financial Crisis? (October-November 2010) 296 The Lost Cause: The Failure of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission (January-February 2011) 312 3. The Dodd-Frank Act 328 Financial Services Outlooks on Dodd-Frank 328 Financial Services Outlooks Regulation without Reason: The Group of Thirty Report (January 2009) 345 Risky Business: Casting the Fed as a Systemic Risk Regulator (February 2009) 361 Reinventing GSEs: Treasury's Plan for Financial Restructuring (March-April 2009) 377 Wallison.indb 6 9/17/12 1:00 PM CONTENTS vii Unfree to Choose: The Administration's Consumer Financial Protection Agency (July 2009) 396 Unnecessary Intervention: The Administration's Effort to Regulate Credit Default Swaps (August 2009) 409 TARP Baby: The Administration's Resolution Authority for Nonbank Financial Firms (September 2009) 422 The Dodd-Frank Act: Creative Destruction, Destroyed (July-August 2010) 439 Is Obama's New Deal Better Than the Old One? (July 2011) 452 The Error at the Heart of the Dodd-Frank Act (August-September 2011) 470 Magical Thinking: The Latest Regulation from the Financial Stability Oversight Council (October-November 2011) 488 Empty Promise: The Holes in the Administration's Housing Finance Reform Plan (February 2012) 502 4. The Case for Repeal 515 A Brief History of Deregulation 518 Title I. The Financial Stability Oversight Council 522 Title II. The Orderly Liquidation Authority 527 Title III. Transfer of Office of Thrift Supervision Authorities to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency 00 Title IV. Regulation of Advisers to Hedge Funds and Others 528 Title V. Insurance 529 Title VI. The Volcker Rule and Other Restrictions 530 Title VII. Regulation of the Derivatives Markets 534 Title VIII. Payment, Clearing, and Settlement Supervision 538 Title IX. Regulation of Housing Finance 539 Title X. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau 540 Practical Considerations 542 Wallison.

Additional information

CIN0844772380A
9780844772387
0844772380
Bad History, Worse Policy: How a False Narrative About the Financial Crisis Led to the Dodd-Frank Act by Peter J. Wallison
Used - Well Read
Hardback
AEI Press
20130125
552
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book. We do our best to provide good quality books for you to read, but there is no escaping the fact that it has been owned and read by someone else previously. Therefore it will show signs of wear and may be an ex library book

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